the program headers. As a result of this, dumplo was advanced too
much causing the end of the dump and most notably the trailing
dump header to be written beyond the end of the the dump medium.
detects and uses the gas section merge support. As a result, a whole bunch
of new sections arrive, including .rodata.str1.8, which was not included
in our custom ldscript.ia64. The result was a loader binary that EFI
rejected.
While here, collect the loader shell commands linker set and include it
in the data area rather than having its own section.
/boot/loader.efi was the last holdout for having a 100% self built ia64
system.
hw.syscons.saver.keybonly: used to specify that only input is to
interrupt the screensaver. This allows one to run a chatty console
app but still have the screen blank out until a key is pressed.
There should probably also be an ioctl for this, we'll do that later.
hw.syscons.saver.blanktime: exports the screensaver timeout via sysctl.
Submitted by: Olivier Houchard <doginou@cognet.ci0.org>
Setting of timestamps on devices had no effect visible to userland
because timestamps for devices were set in places that are never used.
This broke:
- update of file change time after a change of an attribute
- setting of file access and modification times.
The VA_UTIMES_NULL case did not work. Revs 1.31-1.32 were supposed to
fix this by copying correct bits from ufs, but had little or no effect
because the old checks were not removed.
files. We didn't clear the update marks when we set the times, so
some of the settings were sometimes clobbered with the current time a
little later. This caused cp -p even by root to almost always fail
to preserve any times despite not reporting any errors in attempting
to preserve them.
Don't forget to set the archive attribute when we set the read-only
attribute. We should only set the archive attribute if we actually
change something, but we mostly don't bother avoiding setting it
elsewhere, so don't bother here yet.
MFC after: 1 week
that we can compile gcc. This is a hack because it adds a fixed 2MB to
each process's VSIZE regardless of how much is really being used since
there is no grow-up stack support. At least it isn't physical memory.
Sigh.
Add a sysctl to enable tweaking it for new processes.
interface that is compatible with the LUCENT or HERMES firmware.
Instead, it is like the various No Wires Necessary products that were
produced a while ago and then sold to intersil. It will require a
different driver altogether. Remove it from the list of supported
cards.
The 3CRWE777A apperas to be a re-badged SMC 2602W card, so the driver
appears to support it. Add it to the list.
Thanks to Todd Miller for loaning me the card during tonight's FRUUG
meeting for testing against CU's wireless infrastructure.
Grumble. I've seen better documented architectures out of Redmond.
Redo fabric evaluation to not use GET ALL NEXT (GA_NXT). Switches seem
to be trying to wriggle out of supporting this well. Instead, use
GID_FT to get a list of Port IDs and then use GPN_ID/GNN_ID to find the
port and node wwn. This should make working on fabrics a bit cleaner and
more stable.
This also caused some cleanup of SNS subcommand canonicalization so that
we can actually check for FS_ACC and FS_RJT, and if we get an FS_RJT,
print out the reason and explanation codes.
We'll keep the old GA_NXT method around if people want to uncomment a
controlling definition in ispvar.h.
This also had us clean up ISPASYNC_FABRICDEV to use a local lportdb argument
and to have the caller explicitly say that a device is at the end of the
fabric list.
MFC after: 1 week
time-of-day clocks, ported from NetBSD. The front-ends are expected
to be at least partly machine-dependent; the sparc64 EBus and SBus
ones will be commited to MD directories for now (in a subsequent commit).